The Foster City girl with cerebral palsy whose specially adapted tricycle was stolen from her apartment complex will get a new ride, courtesy of Wells Fargo.

Bank officials Thursday pledged $2,000 to replace the red, black and chrome trike, which was designed with Velcro straps on the seat and pedals, oval handlebars and other features that helped 7-year-old Marina Webb-Gordon ride safely.

The money will go to the Bay Area Outreach and Recreation Program in Berkeley, which will build Marina a new tricycle to her specifications if the original cannot be found, Wells Fargo Regional President John Sotoodeh said.

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"We really hope she gets her bike back," Sotoodeh said. "In case she doesn't ... we want to get a bike for Marina that is exactly what she needs."

A second company, Telecom Pioneers of Illinois, has also pledged a tricycle, which Marina's family will donate to the San Mateo County special education department.

"We didn't really expect all this," said Marika Webb, Marina's mother. "It's been great. Out of one bad thing came millions of good things. We've met neighbors who want to help, and the neighborhood kids have been passing out flyers" of the missing tricycle.

Police have not identified any suspects in the theft, Foster City Police Capt. Jon Froomin said.

"It's very difficult if we don't have witnesses," Froomin said.

The distinctive bike was stolen from a parking stall in an apartment complex in the 1100 block of Foster City Boulevard, police said. The thief could face a felony grand theft charge because the trike is worth more than $400, Froomin said.

"But the most important thing is to get her bike back," Froomin said.

The theft left Marina heartbroken because it was the only way she could go to the park, tag along with her friends and accompany her dad, David Gordon, on bicycle rides, her family said.

It also touched the community. The police department received multiple calls offering donations, and one man went to the station with about $200 he had collected going door-to-door, Froomin said.

Webb said her daughter started shaking and crying when she discovered her tricycle was gone and kept asking why anybody would do such a thing.

The tricycle, which originally cost $1,100, apparently was purchased by the county two years ago at the request of special education department officials and given to Marina.

When Webb got news Thursday of the donation for a new trike, she was near tears, Wells Fargo spokeswoman Michele Ashley said.

"I know her mom was very happy and surprised," Ashley said.

Anyone with more information about the missing tricycle is asked to contact the Foster City Police Department at (650) 286-3300.